40 Minn. 319 | Minn. | 1889
This is an action under the statute to determine the adverse cl’aim of the defendant. . The complaint contains general allegations of plaintiffs’ title and ownership, and that the premises are vacant and unoccupied; that the defendant claims some estate or interest adverse to them, and asks judgment determining it. The defendant appears and answers, denying the plaintiffs’ title, and alleging that she acquired title to the land in question by deed from Sykes & Andrews, the owners thereof, on the 11th day of August, 1883, which was recorded on the 23d of the same month. The plaintiffs, in their reply, deny the allegations of new matter in the answer, and thus a complete issue on the question of the legal title was framed by the pleadings. The pleadings did not take the form of a bill and answer in chancery, and, since the answer does not disclose that both parties claim by deed under the defendant’s grantor, and that the defendant’s was prior in point of time, there was nothing in it necessarily calling for any allegations showing the bona, fides and superior equities of the plaintiffs under a later deed from defendant’s grantors. The parties respectively claim to be the holders of the legal title. Barber v. Evans, 27 Minn. 92, (6 N. W. Rep. 445.) Upon the trial, however, the plaintiffs voluntarily assumed the burden of proving that they were bona fide purchasers without any actual notice of defendant’s deed, or of any claim thereto by her, and the court so finds; and this fact must be assumed in disposing of the case in this court.
If the plaintiffs had neither actual nor constructive notice, the equities being equal, they, as holders of the legal title, must of course prevail. The legal title to land does not pass by deed unless so described that it can be identified or located by referring to or following out the description as given, and the effect of the record as constructive notice merely cannot be aided or supplemented by proof of
Here the description is confessedly defective on its face. It is not aided by the addition of particulars containing a correct description or identification, or pointing to it, as might be done, by reference to a previous deed or well-known name or locality, or anything of the kind. “Menage’s supplement to Minneapolis” is unknown, and there is no such plat or survey. It is not a description of the land in suit, nor can it be so construed as against bona fide purchasers. An ex
We come now to consider, in the next place, whether the record of the deed — there being no actual notice — was constructive notice to the plaintiffs of the equitable rights of the defendant, as between her and her grantors, to a reformation of the deed. But this could not well be; for, if the description in the deed is altogether insufficient to locate or identify the property and pass the title, it would not be constructive notice at all to the plaintiffs, and they were not bound to notice it or look for it. Simmons v. Fuller, 17 Minn. 462, (485, 490;) Roberts v. Grace, 16 Minn. 115, (126, 135;) Martindale Conv. § 276 et seq. It is intended that the record should be a correct and sufficient source of information, and the statute did not mean to put purchasers upon further inquiry by virtue of its operation making the fact of registration constructive notice; and parties are understood to purchase upon the faith of the title as appearing of record. Frost v. Beekman, 1 John. Ch. 288, 298; Ledyard v. Butler, 9 Paige, 132, (37 Am. Dec. 379;) Jackson v. How, 19 John. 80; Fort v. Burch, 6 Barb. 60, 74. It is the settled rule that registration is constructive notice only of what appears on the face of the deed, and of the description of the premises therein. And if upon the face of the deed as registered the property in controversy is not so described as to identify it with reasonable certainty, the record cannot be notice to subsequent bona fide purchasers. Roberts v. Grace, supra; Will. Eq. Jur. *256. Under the registration laws it is sometimes said in
The distinction between constructive and actual notice is also to be noticed. Constructive notice of the contents of a deed arises as an inference or presumption of law from the mere fact of record, and is in law equivalent to actual notice of what appears upon the face of the record to the party bound to search for it, whether he has seen or known of it or not; that is, constructive notice under the recording acts may bind the title, but does not bind the conscience; while actual notice binds the conscience of the party. Underwood v. Courtown, 2 Schoales & L. 41, 66. Hence, where the attention of an interested party is directed to a defective deed or the recorded copy thereof, he may get actual knowledge of the facts sufficient to affect his conscience, and put him upon inquiry, so as to charge him with notice, which would not otherwise be legally attributable to him from the record only. Thomas, Mortg. § 491. In this case it is only upon the assumption in advance that the plaintiffs knew in fact of the existence of the defendant’s deed or the description therein, or were chargeable with notice by the record thereof, that it can be claimed that they were put upon inquiry, or that the title of these lots was bound by it. But they had no actual notice of it. The search made for them did not disclose it. The land was not known by such description. They were not put upon inquiry as to the particulars of the transaction, and they could not be constructively bound by a deed which did not describe the land, and inquiry of the parties to that deed did not become a duty, since they had no notice in fact. Maul v. Rider, 59 Pa. St. 167. As was said in Barnard v. Campau, 29
Order affirmed.